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30 nap a termék visszaküldésére
The vote was won. The petition was dismissed. The sealing held. And then the Veil began to crack.
Six months after the petition, Saoirse Ren has built something real - a court that feels like home, a relationship with clear eyes and no illusions, and a settlement community beginning to gain the standing it was always owed. The work is good. The ordinary is hard-won. She does not intend to lose it.
But the Veil is failing in the oldest part of the world. The sealing she carries is structurally incomplete - designed for three anchor points and running on one - and the fissures appearing in the western reaches are visible to the naked eye. The timeline is months. Perhaps less.
The solution requires two ancient relics scattered across courts that do not want to give them up, and the participation of the one person who has spent four centuries trying to extinguish her bloodline. Brigh Fenn is not her enemy. She may be the only one who can help. But what the sealing needs from her will cost her the one thing she has been carrying alone since the catastrophe - and asking a woman to set down a four-century grief is not a negotiation. It is something else entirely.
A Throne of Bone and Starlight is the finale of the AVOA series - the book where everything costs something real, every thread finds its place, and the ending is earned rather than given. For readers who stayed for the slow burn: this is where it lands.
The conclusion of the AVOA trilogy. Continues from A Crown of Iron and Grief.
Tropes: fated mates · slow burn concluded · relic hunt · political intrigue · enemies to something else · morally grey love interest · Celtic mythology · found family · HEA
Book 3 of 3. Read A Vow of Ash and A Crown of Iron and Grief first.